BREAKING NEWS

BREAKING NEWS

Ireland faces more austerity as bailout era ends

DUBLIN – Ireland’s three-year bailout ordeal ends this weekend, a victory in its battle against bankruptcy. But while the government is ready to finance itself without aid, the Irish can’t yet escape what has become Europe’s longest-running austerity program.

The Irish faced ruin in 2010, when the runaway cost of a bank-bailout program begun two years earlier destroyed the country’s ability to borrow at affordable rates. To the rescue came fellow European nations and the International Monetary Fund with a three-year loan package worth 67.5 billion euros ($93 billion).

The last of those funds arrived in Ireland’s state coffers this week. On Sunday, Prime Minister Enda Kenny will address the nation on live TV to salute the financial rebound that has eluded the eurozone’s other bailout recipients Greece, Portugal and Cyprus.

Unlike them, Ireland has repaired its fiscal reputation by exceeding a series of deficit-cutting targets and avoiding both labor unrest and protracted recession.

That surprisingly strong performance has already allowed Ireland since mid-2012 to resume limited auctions of long-term bonds at affordable rates, an essential prerequisite to life without an EU-IMF safety net.

Ireland’s treasury also has built up more than 20 billion euros in reserves that, should disaster strike again, would permit the state to pay its bills through 2014 without any immediate need for renewed aid.

International confidence that Ireland can resume financing its debt repayments on its own means that the yields – the effective interest rates – on Irish 10-year bonds today have fallen to below 3.5 percent from 2011 highs exceeding 15 percent. That’s lower than Spain, which has received emergency support for its banks but avoided a full-fledged bailout, and Italy, which continues to finance one of the eurozone’s worst per-capita debts.

The most obvious evidence of renewed confidence at home is all the “sold” signs suddenly appearing in Dublin, home to nearly a third of the country’s 4.6 million residents and the epicenter of a property bubble that burst with disastrous effect in 2008.

Property prices had slumped more than 50 percent in the five years since as credit crumbled, banks drowned in toxic assets and hundreds of thousands became trapped in negative equity, but the market is finally stirring again.

Ireland still faces a mountain to climb to achieve its key goal of reducing its annual deficits back below 3 percent of gross domestic product, the limit supposed to be observed by all 17 nations using the euro currency.

Ireland recorded a European Union record deficit of 32 percent in 2010, the year that the bill for sustaining the country’s six domestic banks grew so large that Ireland’s own credit ratings crumbled.